Summary:
In this study, 872 heart valves surgically excised from 810 patients during a period of 5 years
(1994 through 1998) were examined pathologically.
There was a predominance of aortic (506 patients) versus mitral valves (246 pts.). While aortic
valves came more often from men (364) than from women (142), in mitral valves the M:F ratio is
82/164. Isolated calcific aortic stenosis appeared as the most frequent valvular disease (418 pts.),
with predominance of its sclerotic - senile type (238 pts.). Mitral stenosis (185 pts.) remains the
classical postrheumatic disease. The relative frequency of a subvalvular stenosing mitral lesion is
stressed. The „pure“ incompetence of both aortic (70 pts.) and mitral (56 pts.) valve was usually
based on valvular myxoid degeneration. An aorto-mitral disease requiring replacement of both
valves (51 pts.) presented typically as a postrheumatic lesion, however, a combination of a postr-
heumatic mitral with a degenerative - sclerotic aortic valve disease may be possible. In 30 pati-
ents, the valvular replacement was performed for infective endocarditis or a post-IE lesion,
mostly of the aortic valve.
With the almost non-existence of acute rheumatic fever and with the increasing average age of
population in this country, we may expect a long-term decline in mitral valve disease and an
increase in aortic valve disease, particularly in the sclerotic type of aortic stenosis.
Key words:
surgically excised heart valves - valvular diseases - etiopathogenesis - aortic stenosis -
myxoid degeneration
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